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On February 15, 1947, an Avianca Douglas DC-4 registered C-114 crashed into Mount El Tablazo en route from Barranquilla to Bogotá, Colombia, killing all 53 people on board.[1]
Accident | |
---|---|
Date | February 15, 1947 |
Summary | CFIT due to pilot/navigation error |
Site | Mount El Tablazo, near Bogotá, Colombia |
Aircraft | |
Aircraft type | Douglas DC-4 |
Operator | Avianca |
Registration | C-114 |
Flight origin | Ernesto Cortissoz International Airport, Barranquilla |
Destination | Aeropuerto de Techo, Bogotá |
Passengers | 49 |
Crew | 4 |
Fatalities | 53 |
Survivors | 0 |
Mount El Tablazo was shrouded in fog when, at 12:18 local time, the aircraft crashed into it at an elevation of about 10,500 feet. The cause of the crash was determined to be pilot error, with the crew deviating from the designated airway and flying below a safe altitude.[2]
At the time, the crash was the worst commercial airline crash in history, [3] eventually matched by the crash of Eastern Air Lines Flight 605 near Baltimore three months later. Several Colombian professional soccer players from Barranquilla perished in the crash, including Romelio Martínez, after whom Barranquilla's municipal stadium was renamed years later.
References
edit- ^ "Aviation Safety Network".
- ^ "Plane Crash Info.com".
- ^ "50 Die When Four-Motored Colombian Airliner Smashes into 9,000-Foot Mountain". The Miami Herald. United Press. 16 Feb 1947. Retrieved 1 August 2020 – via newspapers.com.